Let's close down the schools. Give me a voucher for the 8k or so we spend, and I'll send my child to a private school. The Auburn teachers union is killing us. Greedy.
City
New contract: 2.9 percent pay raise Auburn teachers retain spousal coverage
AUBURN — In a new, three-year labor contract, Auburn teachers have retained health coverage for spouses and will get 2.9 percent cost-of-living raises this year.
Including step raises, which average 1.7 percent a year for teachers with fewer than 19 years experience, the raises will cost taxpayers $593,103 in the next year, Auburn Superintendent Tom Morrill said Friday.
The contract was approved by teachers and the Auburn School Committee on Thursday night.
The contract "is a fair one," Morrill said. "We do recognize the talents and hard work of our teachers," he said. "We want to make sure we have a wage that will attract and attain good-quality teachers."
Teachers with spouses on the city's health care will have to pay more. They now pay 10 percent of their premiums, and will pay 20 percent, with taxpayers paying the remaining 80 percent. That rate is for teachers' spouses who have no other health coverage option.
Teachers with spouses who do have access to coverage from their employer will have to pay 30 percent of the premium, with taxpayers paying the remaining 70 percent.
Teachers who only need insurance for themselves will pay nothing for premiums; taxpayers will pay 100 percent. Those teachers used to pay for 5 percent.
Teachers with children will spend the same for health coverage, 7 percent, with taxpayers paying 93 percent.
Some teachers, especially those who don't need coverage for spouses, are making out well and will see more in their paychecks, while others will see their income flat after having to pay more for health care, said the teachers union president.
Reaction of membership about paying more for spouse coverage "is it's a bitter pill to swallow," said Timothy Wegmann. "It has harmed a number of people. In these tough economic times it's keeping people where they are (financially), regardless of the economic package that came through."
Having to pay more for spouses "is a bad precedent," Wegmann added. He worries it will be a model for other school systems to follow at a time when there's a national movement to cover all.
Wegmann said he's received e-mails from teachers, and one wrote that her husband is sick and needs kidney transplants, and now she'll have to pay more for health care.
For teachers like himself, who have a spouse and children on the city's health plan, what he pays in each paycheck will go up. "My wife can't get insurance," Wegmann said. "I'm going up bi-weekly from $72.55 to $150. It's doubling."
In their vote to approve the contract, teachers approved it by an overwhelming 91 percent. The margin "was not an overall approval of the what's in the contract, but more of an adjustment to the times and economic conditions," Wegmann said.
Morrill said that after two years of negotiations, "there was a compelling sense of moving forward" in a background of deteriorating economy.
When negotiations began in September of 2007, few imagined there would be such a change in the economy, Morrill said. As state tax incomes continue to underperform projections, Maine school districts face significant cuts. "The challenge ahead of us is steep," Morrill said.
Despite the economy, teachers will get bigger paychecks this year and after. In addition to next year's 2.9 percent cost of living hike, they will receive an additional 1.5 percent during each of the following two years. Teachers went without a cost-of-living raise last year, Morrill said.
Auburn teachers' salaries range from $30,000 for a beginning teacher to $54,101 for a teacher with a master's degree and 19 years or more experience.
The pay raises will take effect immediately. The changes in health premiums will begin in January. The school department is hoping to eventually save taxpayer money in health care, something they said they cannot control. They're hoping to save $90,000 the first year, "but we're really cautious about that savings until we see the final figure," Morrill said.
bwashuk@sunjournal.com
Comments
By my calculation, to off
By my calculation, to off set the added expenditure created by the raise costing $593K plus the absolute minimum loss of 668K from the state, Auburn needs to layoff 6% of the teachers and that is absolute minimum if it was done with the average pay of a laidoff teacher being the average of all teachers. Since the teachers at the bottom of the pay scale will be laidoff first, it is probably necessary to layoff atleast 10% to break even. I would suggest not wasting any time since every day money is going out the door. Atleast the teachers who will be left got their raise and insurance for themselves, children and spouses even if it was at the cost of their peers jobs and the education of Auburn children. The remaining teachers will certainly be forced to earn those raises and benefits with the extra work load they just negotiated for themselves.
Candiceanne, are you saying
Candiceanne, are you saying that 90% of teachers in Auburn took an increase in pay and spousal insurance at the cost of 10% of their peers? Here's a little info for ya. The school board offered teachers a $6,000/year increase in salary to drop spousal insurance. Sounds like a good deal if you don't have a spouse, but pretty devistating if you have a spouse who is terminally ill and can not get insurance, right? Well, approx. 50% of Auburn teachers do not need spousal insurance, yet they took a hit for those who do. Get your facts straight before you infer that Auburn teachers don't care about their co-workers. A $6,000 pay increase, especially in this economy, ON TOP of a cost of living raise sounds pretty sweet. Would you take the money knowing that your co-worker would be financial devistated? Something tells me yes.
Actually the insurance was
Actually the insurance was not even figured in. I only took the cost of the 2.9% raise as listed in this article and added the "best case" loss in funding from the state in the other article today. The total of additional cost created by the raise plus the loss in state funding makes for a 10% teacher layoff.
The 2.9% raise would amount to more than 5% since last hired, lowest paid would be released first. It takes more of them to make up the cost than of 2.9% for higher paid teachers. Sorry the insurance piece had nothing to do with it. The teachers voting themselves a 2.9% raise in effected voted to layoff 10% of their peers.
Unbelievable. What poor
Unbelievable. What poor negotiation on the part of the Auburn School Committee.
I hope teachers will quit complaining. They've got a Cadillac of a health care plan. And raises when nobody else is getting them.
actually, FIXIT, the premium
actually, FIXIT, the premium is just over $1500 per month for an entire family through Anthem. That's $18,000 per year. The school department will pay 70% of that, or $12,600 per year. Add that to starting $30,000 and it's a total of $42,600 per year for someone with a college degree to work 187 7.5 hour days (comes to just over $30 an hour combined salary and benefits, or $21 an hour just salary). Health insurance is the only benefit. No dental is included. There are blue collar, non-college educated workers starting at not much less than that. It's wonderful of the SJ to keep stating "the taxpayer pays". Of course the taxpayer pays (as an alternative, how about getting rid of public education- it's too socialist- private education for everyone! Wouldn't we just love those tuition bills? ).
Where is the proof that the
Where is the proof that the cost per person for insurance is over $30,000? I'd like to see proof of that, seeing as how I know for a fact that one company which offers one of the best health insurance plans in the country pays less than $20,000.
The opportunity to cover a spouse (by paying additional premiums) is a traditional, legitimate benefit of employment. If you're not getting this benefit, you should take your complaint to your own company, which is obviously a cheap money-grubbing Scrooge, which further only gets away with it because you're willing to work there anyway, instead of griping about the people who do receive a normal benefit.
I don't know any of these teachers but I don't have to know them to know what's fair in a civilized society.
Well if the city admin is
Well if the city admin is such a coward maybe it is time we start a ref. to call ALL CITY, STATE, & County employees be ALLOWED ONLY PAID INSURANCE TO THE EMPOLYEE THEMSELVES!!!!
HECK THE ONES DECIDING THIS FIASCO WOULD LOSE THIER INSURANCE FOR THIER SPOUCE TOO, SO IT IS NO WONDER WE HAVE THIS &*^$&^% DOES ANYONE KNOW THE COST PER PERSON FOR THIER BENIFITS ONLY????? IT IS OVER A WHOOPING 30 thousand dollars that does not include salery!!!! WE HAVENT HAD AN INCREASE IN # YEARS AND THESE YO YOS WANT AND WANT LETS PRIVITISE THEM SEE HOW MUCH THEY LIKE THAT!!!!!
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The raise is ridiculous. My
The raise is ridiculous. My fiance works for the state of Maine (community college system) and she's in a pay freeze for at least 2 years AND will be having to start to pay for her health care. We're getting married and I won't have free health coverage. When you become a teacher, you know right off the bat that you're not going to be getting rich. It's a fact of the job. In this economy, start being thankful that your job isn't going to be axed. Good job teachers--you wasted significant time in your candelight vigils.